Since leaving the No. 2 position at the Department of Education in January, Eugene W. Hickok has been hunkered down writing in his Carlisle, Pa., home.
Mr. Hickok is working on a book about the federal No Child Left Behind Act. It鈥檚 a behind-the-scenes look at how the law was crafted and how its implementation has unfolded.
鈥淚 was sort of in the perfect position to write this, as a former state chief and school board member, and sitting where I was at the department overseeing implementation of the law,鈥 said Mr. Hickok, who had previously served as Pennsylvania鈥檚 secretary of education and on the board of the 4,800-student Carlisle Area School District.
The former deputy secretary of the federal Education Department said the book would look at both the policy and politics of the law, a still-developing saga as several states are resisting the law鈥檚 mandates.
鈥淭his is a relatively unique thing in American politics: federal law leveraging a whole lot of state action,鈥 he said in an interview last week.
The 3-year-old school accountability law championed by President Bush is at a critical stage, Mr. Hickok said. Education Department officials had predicted early on that this third year of implementation would be the most difficult, with more of the law鈥檚 accountability measures taking effect.
鈥淭he states are coming in with all kinds of concerns, but my major hope is that [department officials] hold the line on the law,鈥 Mr. Hickok said.
But don鈥檛 expect his book to dish dirt on his Bush administration colleagues, such as former Secretary of Education Rod Paige or current Secretary Margaret Spellings , who helped craft the law in 2001 from her position as White House domestic-policy chief..
鈥淚t鈥檚 not a kiss-and-tell book,鈥 Mr. Hickok said. But do expect to get a peek inside the Education Department, which under this administration has tended to be tight-lipped with the press.
Mr. Hickok said he鈥檚 halfway done writing the first draft of the book, but doesn鈥檛 yet have a publisher. And though he鈥檚 in discussions with a variety of organizations including think tanks, lobbying firms, and universities about a new job, he hasn鈥檛 decided what his next professional move will be.
When it appears, Mr. Hickok鈥檚 book may have competition for the best-seller list: Former Secretary Paige is writing a book of his own, about the achievement gap.